NCERT Class VII English Chapter 3 Gopal and the Hilsa Fish

National Council of Educational Research and Training (NCERT) Book for Class VII
Subject: English
Chapter: Chapter 3 – Gopal and the Hilsa Fish

Class VII NCERT English Text Book Chapter 3 Gopal and the Hilsa Fish is given below

Before You Read
Have you ever read a comic book? A comic book contains stories told mainly through pictures.

Gopal and the Hilsa-fish

Answer the following questions.

1. Why did the king want no more talk about the hilsa-fish?

2. What did the king ask Gopal to do to prove that he was clever?

3. What three things did Gopal do before he went to buy his hilsa-fish?

4. How did Gopal get inside the palace to see the king after he had bought the fish?

5. Explain why no one seemed to be interested in talking about the hilsa-fish which Gopal had bought.

6. Write ‘True’ or ‘False’ against each of the following sentences.

(i) The king lost his temper easily._____________
(ii) Gopal was a madman.___________
(iii) Gopal was a clever man.___________
(iv) Gopal was too poor to afford decent clothes.___________
(v) The king got angry when he was shown to be wrong._____________

1. Notice how in a comic book, there are no speech marks when characters talk. Instead what they say is put in a speech ‘bubble’. However, if we wish to repeat or ‘report’ what they say, we must put it into reported speech.

Change the following sentences in the story to reported speech. The first one has been done for you.

(i) How much did you pay for that hilsa? The woman asked the man how much he had paid for that hilsa.

(iv) I want to see the king.
Gopal told the guards_______________________________________

(v) Bring the man to me at once.
The king ordered the guard___________________________________

2. Find out the meaning of the following words by looking them up in the dictionary. Then use them in sentences of your own.

Picture Reading

1. Look at the pictures and read the text aloud.

2. Now ask your partner questions about each picture.

(i) Where is the stag?
(ii) What is he doing?
(iii) Does he like his antlers (horns)?
(iv) Does he like his legs?
(v) Why is the stag running?
(vi) Is he able to hide in the bushes?
(vii) Where are the hunters now?
(viii) Are they closing in on the stag?
(ix) Is the stag free?
(x) What does the stag say about his horns and his legs?

3. Now write the story in your own words. Give it a title.

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4. Complete the following word ladder with the help of the clues given below.

Clues

1. Mother will be very _________if you don’t go to school.

2. As soon as he caught ___________of the teacher, Mohan started writing.

3. How do you like my _____________ kitchen garden? Big enough for you, is it?

4. My youngest sister is now _____________ a old.

5. Standing on the _____________, he saw children playing on the road.

6. Don’t make such a . Nothing will happen.

7. Don’t cross the till the green light comes on.

The Shed

Do you know what a shed is? A cow shed, a tool shed, a wood shed, for example. It’s a small room, away from the main house, for storing or keeping things, animals, tools, vehicles, etc. Ask your partner if she/he has ever seen a shed. Let her/ him describe it to the class.
Now read the poem.
There’s a shed at the bottom of our garden With a spider’s web hanging across the door, The hinges are rusty and creak in the wind.
When I’m in bed I lie and I listen, I’ll open that door one day.

There’s a dusty old window around at the side
With three cracked panes of glass,
I often think there’s someone staring at me
Each time that I pass,
I’ll peep through that window one day.

My brother says there’s a ghost in the shed
Who hides under the rotten floorboards,
And if I ever dare to set foot inside
He’ll jump out and chop off my head,
But I’ll take a peek one day.

I know that there isn’t really a ghost,
My brother tells lies to keep the shed for his den;
There isn’t anyone staring or making strange noises
And the spider has been gone from his web
since I don’t know when,

I’ll go into that shed one day soon,

But not just yet…

FRANK FLYNN

1. Answer the following questions.
(i) Who is the speaker in the poem?
(ii) Is she/he afraid or curious, or both?
(iii) What is she/he planning to do soon?
(iv) “But not just yet…” suggests doubt, fear, hesitation, laziness or something else. Choose the word which seems right to you. Tell others why you chose it.

2. Is there a room in your house or a house in your neighbourhood/locality where you would rather not go alone, and never at night? If there is such a place and a story to go with it, let others hear all about it.